Greetings,

You have responded to an automatically generated message from the Issue Tracker. You cannot respond directly to these messages. Please log onto the website, go to the issue, and enter your comments in the Additional Comments box. When you are finished with your edits to the issue, click the submit button to update the issue report with your comments. This is how we keep all notes related to issues organized and available to all in the community.

To see the Additional Comments box on the issue report, you must be logged in, and your cookies must be enabled. Type in your user name and password into fields displayed in the upper right corner, then click the Login button. If you do this from the Home page, you may have to click Login again on the Login Page. When you are logged in, it will show that you are Logged In, and there will be a button displayed in the upper right corner for you to click when you are ready to log out.

Once you are logged in, you will be presented with a page called My Start Page under the My Pages tab, and the left menu will show links to tools. You can jump directly to your issue, by typing a number in the input box in the right column of My Start Page, or you can select My Issues from the Tools menu to see a list of your issues with an open status. You can show a list of *all* your issues by choosing 'Edit Query' and selecting additional choices in the Status field, by clicking on them with your Control key pressed down, then click on 'Submit Query'.

To send attachments regarding issues, please attach the file directly to the issue. Use the link "Create a new attachment" on the issue and then select Binary file (application/octet-stream) where asked, "What kind of file is this?" if your file's type does not show in the list.

Thanx,
Diane

--
Diane Mackay
OOo User and Volunteer WorkerBee
http://www.OpenOffice.org


Giedrius Tumelis wrote:
I see :)_
In school untill 5 class we used symbol ":" for division too, but later always used fraction notation.


I wouldnt used latex if openoffice had more abilities like mathematical symbols. By the way there is some other projects mathematical notation. You can look MATHML project of W3C in internet if you want.

regards
phd. student of informatics
Giedrius Tumelis

[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

To comment on the following update, log in, then open the issue:
http://www.openoffice.org/issues/show_bug.cgi?id=39656





------- Additional comments from [EMAIL PROTECTED] Thu Jan 27 07:08:44 -0800 2005 -------
Im working as a maths teacher in germany and here, the symbol for a division is
simply a ":" (colon , no dash in the middle). Therefore I will not use the "div"
symbol from the formula editor because me students won't understand (at least
some of them). I have to use a colon, in the formula editor the colon is always
shown with italic attribute so I have to write for every division "a nitalic :
b" to get the result "a : b", that I need in my papers at school.


I would in common appreceate a larger amount of symbols like in Latex ("double"
letters, I think they are called "Fraktur", and also a mapsto-symbol like in Latex).


---------------------------------------------------------------------
Please do not reply to this automatically generated notification from
Issue Tracker. Please log onto the website and enter your comments.
http://qa.openoffice.org/issue_handling/project_issues.html#notification

.





---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]


--------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Reply via email to